Key Points of the Story
Detailed Summary
Ramlal had seven children: three sons and four daughters. All his children were healthy, but his youngest daughter, Sulekha, was different. At birth, she was very fair and pretty. However, when she was ten months old, she fell from her cot and injured her brain. At two years old, she had smallpox, leaving her face with deep black pock-marks. She could not speak until she was five, and when she finally did, she stammered. Because of this, everyone called her Bholi, meaning simpleton. She was seen as foolish even by her family, who did not care for her. Ramlal's eldest daughter, Radha, was already married, and the second daughter, Mangla, had her marriage arranged. Ramlal was only worried about Bholi.
A primary school for girls opened in the village, and the Tehsildar Sahib came to inaugurate it. He told Ramlal, “As a revenue official, you represent the government in the village, so you must set a good example. You should send your daughters to school.” Both Ramlal and his wife were against girls' education, but Ramlal felt he could not disagree with the Tehsildar. His wife suggested, “Send Bholi to school. With her looks and lack of understanding, there is little chance of her getting married. Let the teachers handle her.”
The next day, Ramlal asked Bholi to join him for school. She was very scared and refused to go. Ramlal asked his wife to give Bholi decent clothes. Although she had never had new clothes, that day she received a clean dress. She was bathed, and oil was applied to her dry hair. Only then did she start to think that perhaps she was going to a place better than home.
At the school, Bholi saw many girls her age in the classrooms. The headmistress asked her to sit in a corner of one classroom. The teacher was very kind and asked Bholi her name, but Bholi could not say it fully and began to cry. When school finished, the teacher invited her to come back the next day, and Bholi nodded. As she got to know the teacher, her fears began to fade, and soon she was speaking without stammering.
Bholi was seven when Mangla got married. She had passed several classes, although the exact number is unclear. Her father received a marriage proposal for her from Bishamber, a wealthy grocer from a nearby village. He limped and was around fifty years old, with children from a previous marriage. Ramlal accepted the proposal and asked Bishamber to come with a bar (wedding procession).
Bishamber arrived with great show for the wedding, and everyone was joyful with friends and relatives present. However, when Bishamber was about to place the garland around Bholi's neck, a woman pulled back her veil. When Bishamber saw Bholi's face covered in pock-marks, he refused to marry her. After much persuasion, he agreed to marry her only if Ramlal paid him five thousand rupees. Ramlal handed over the money, and Bishamber felt triumphant. Just as he was about to place the garland on Bholi, she knocked it away, declaring that she would not marry such a greedy and cowardly man. The wedding procession left without a bride, leaving Ramlal filled with grief and shame.
Bholi comforted her father, saying that she would care for them in their old age and would become a teacher at the same school where she had received her education.
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Difficult Words
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1. What is the main plot of the story "Bholi"? | ![]() |
2. What are the key themes presented in "Bholi"? | ![]() |
3. How does Bholi's character develop throughout the story? | ![]() |
4. What are the difficult words in the story "Bholi," and what do they mean? | ![]() |
5. What message does the story "Bholi" convey about education? | ![]() |